Originally posted by: Nemesis 1
Or we could assume that the brand new engine that Daniel just invented. Not the one used to do Doom 3/4 .   Will be in developers hands NOW and games are already being ported  or created using this tek so that when Intel is ready a few games will be available. 
   If their the right games It will be a good start and I would jump onboard.  One must remember Intel has 80% of the market.  Game developers should and probably will be all over a tech that consumes less time and $$$.  AND is far less complex than present day programming.   As I said this is a win win for all those who don't adapt early will fall behind.   $$$$ is a motavator .   IF developers  believe intel will have the processing power to run games at exceptable frame rates . THEY will be motivated.
   I wonder what it was that brought Carmen onboard with intel .  It wouldn't be or couldn't be that RtRT is blind to the OS.  He does run the Larrabbe project ya know.
		
		
	 
of course you could assume anything .. and you 
are jumping aboard the intel ship with your new [future] rig, i believe
i have been following the developments with RtRT for a long time ... 
=my analysis leads me to believe that this IS what Intel is aiming for ... BUT it will never replace the GPU - not in the foreseeable [5-7 year] future.
i believe, as games get much [much] more *complex* we will find the increasing need for 
both the GPU and CPU - along with complex physics calculations whose tasks are not even clearly assigned to HW yet. 
And don't write off AMD [yet] ... they are looking at this future also and they believe they have it also [eventually] covered with Fusion.  This is where their philosophy diverges from intel's.
RtRT is an excellent 
addition to game engines - with increasing importance -  and i believe we will see it and new technology ... eventually right past 
ST:NG Holodecks [if 
we survive].
But it is very difficult to predict what will happen after 5 years ... i don't think RtRT will be more then another dev "tool"; and i don't believe it "is far less complex than present day programming"
EDIT: i wonder what MS thinks .. and how it will fit in with their schemes?
:Q